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Ontological Hypertext

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... determine that a page about 'yetis' is relevant to a search ... a-b-o-m-i-n-a-b-l-e- -s-n-o-w-m-a-n in a particular document refers to a Yeti. Ontologies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ontological Hypertext


1
Ontological Hypertext
  • Gary Wills

2
Overview
  • Open Hypertext
  • Hypertext Design
  • Ontologies
  • Ontological Hypertext Design

3
Open Hypertext
  • Fountain et al in 1990 describe an open
    hypermedia system as one
  • which does not impose any mark-up upon the data
    that will prevent the data from being accessible
    to other processes that do not belong to the
    system.
  • In which there is a separation of links from data
    objects.
  • Links are first class objects.

4
Linkbases
  • The link information is held in link databases
    (linkbases).
  • A linkbase holds all the information referring to
    a particular set of links,
  • linkbases were commonly flat text files with one
    record per link, now represented XML
  • linkbases containing the source and destination
    information.
  • Link description, and any other information
    required.
  • More than one linkbase can be applied to provided
    different views.

5
Types of Links
  • Specific Links
  • From a specific point in a specific document.

Specific
S
D
6
Types of Links
  • Local Links
  • From any matching point in a specific document.

Local
S
D
7
Types of Links
  • Generic Links
  • From any matching point in any document

Generic
S
D
8
Types of Links
  • Specific, Local and Generic links
  • As they are not embedded as mark-up there can be
    more than one destination returned
  • Links have traditionally been explicitly authored
    and stored
  • To implement an intended navigational order

9
Distributed Link Services
  • Applying open hypermedia principles to the Web.
  • the Distributed Link Service.

10
Traditional linking
  • The text can be become over linked.
  • As links are added at run time
  • Failure of link integrator.
  • We need to decrease the reliance on authored
    links
  • More sophisticated content recognition
  • TF-IDF
  • QUIC
  • Recommender Systems
  • Adaptive Hypermedia

11
Overview
  • Open Hypertext
  • Hypertext Design
  • Ontologies
  • Ontological Hypertext Design

12
Hypertext Design
  • The objective of hypermedia design models is to
    produce a well-organised web site.
  • The organisation is undertaken at the level of a
    particular building-block an abstract data unit
    which may match a frame, paragraph or region on a
    Web page.
  • The resulting applications are largely built to
    present/publish the data, but not to manage the
    content.

13
Hypertext Design
  • Many of the hypertext models take a simple
    layered approach
  • catalogue of assets
  • A lack of cement connecting the layers and the
    means of mapping between the different layers
    when addressing the content

14
Hypertext Design
  • The increasing sophistication of these models
    allows the designer to deal with interaction and
    personalisation, but precludes one of the basic
    features of hypertext the text itself.
  • Not the content unit but the concepts
  • Gap between organisation and origination of
    material when using generic links

15
Hypertext Design
  • Many models restrict user navigation by use of
    buttons or links contained in tool or sidebars.
  • However, usability studies by Nielsen show
    when they arrive on a page, users ignore
    navigation bars and other global design elements
    instead they look only at the content area of the
    page .

16
Overview
  • Open Hypertext
  • Hypertext Design
  • Ontologies
  • Ontological Hypertext Design

17
Ontologies
Ontology
Dictionary
Formal Logic
Specification of Conceptualization
Abstract Relations
Definitions of Terms
  • Ontologies form the backbone of the knowledge
    interpretation
  • Hypertext aims to improve familiar textual
    communications
  • Semantic Web machine processed semantics
  • Knowledge exchange and reuse

18
Ontologies
  • In Knowledge Management an ontology is a
    specification of a conceptualization Gruber
  • defines the vocabulary with which queries and
    assertions are exchanged among agents
  • Ontologies sets out the entities that we are
    interested in and the relationships that bind
    them together.
  • This is intended to be a pragmatic definition
  • An ontology is a tool whose quality is entirely
    dependent on its usefulness.

19
Ontologies
  • An immediate Web application of ontologies is in
    searching
  • otherwise a purely syntactic activity matching
    patterns of letters.
  • Ontology-augmented searches can determine that a
    page about yetis is relevant to a search for
    monsters,
  • Formal statements in a standard Web language
    refer directly to concepts in the ontologies and
    to some content on the Web,
  • a-b-o-m-i-n-a-b-l-e- -s-n-o-w-m-a-n in a
    particular document refers to a Yeti.

20
Ontologies
  • An ontology is a formal model
  • that allow reasoning about concepts and objects
    that appear in the real world
  • that allow reasoning (crucially) about the
    complex relationships between them
  • Normal hypertext design practice analyses the
    texts in order to devise a suitable
    infrastructure.
  • Ontologically-motivated hypertexts derive the
    structuring of their components from the
    relationships between objects in the real world.

21
Overview
  • Open Hypertext
  • Hypertext Design
  • Ontologies
  • Ontological Hypertext Design

22
Ontological linking
  • Ontological linking potentially offers
  • agree collection of significant concepts,
    expressed as an agreed vocabulary in a given
    natural language, modelled together with agreed
    inter-relationships.
  • linking through simple lexical matching had
    serious limitations due to the uncontrolled
    method of adding generic links

23
Ontological linking
  • Ontological linking potentially offers
  • providing an understanding of what can be linked
  • subject key terms, foreign terms, named entities,
    general concepts.
  • with what kinds of things should be linked in
    order to achieve a particular goal
  • glossary explanation, tutorial support, related
    information

24
Building Ontological hypertexts
  • Ontologies are used to define the entities of
    interest
  • different perspectives on these entities will
    result in different ontology's.
  • for example subject ontology, community
    ontology, argumentation ontology
  • result in different linked structures that are
    suitable for entirely different purposes

25
COHSE project (Conceptual OHS Environment)
  • COHSE is ontological hypermedia system
  • combining an existing open hypermedia link
    service with an ontological reasoning service.
  • to provide linking on the concepts that appear in
    Web pages, as opposed to linking on simple
    uninterpretted text fragments.
  • COHSE used a standard Web browser controlled by
    an adapted link service which in turn used
    independent services to manipulate the exposed
    DOM of the Web page, resulting in the effect of
    ontologically-controlled hypertext.

26
COHSE
  • The ontologies are internally represented using
    DAMLOIL and queries are satisfied using the FaCT
    reasoner

27
Ontoportal
  • A system designed to create portals onto weakly
    linked resources.
  • The portal allows a weakly linked web to be
    enriched through the meta-layer provided by the
    portal

28
T-portal
  • It allows users to benefit from web-based
    teaching and learning resources by linking
    related but not previously linked resources.

29
Writing in the Context of Knowledge (WiCK)
interrelationships between concepts embedded in
the documents, and exposing these concepts whilst
the document is being written.
authors with appropriate knowledge for
constructing texts
30
WiCKED
  • The authoring environment is supported by an
    enhanced knowledge structure with which it
    interacts to provide at authoring time various
    services including
  • content generation for automatic text creation,
  • annotation to keep explicit reference to the
    source,
  • concept browsing to explore ontological
    relationships,
  • semantic queries over a repository of
    semantically annotated and indexed documents,
  • document management for usual services with a
    document store.
  • WiCKed is based on Triplestore the AKT 3store
    RDF knowledge base.

31
WiCKED Example
  • For example let us examine a research proposal
    for Quai Interactive Document System (QuIDS).
  • Research Ontology, Subject Ontology, Project
    Ontology, Document ontology
  • provide a summary of the results and conclusions
    of recent work in the technological/scientific
    area which is covered by the research proposal.
  • identify the overall aims of the project and
    the individual measurable objectives against
    which you would wish the outcome of the work to
    be assessed

32
WiCKED
  • A document authoring environment that takes
    advantage of some semantic web technologies to
    enable knowledge reuse while creating new
    documents.
  • The consistency and coherence of resulting
    documents are improved because they explicitly
    assimilate and link to relevant background
    knowledge.

Text editor
Knowledge fragments from KB
33
WiCK
34
Conclusions
  • Open hypertext is well established
  • Versatile linking structures
  • Explicitly authored.
  • Hypertext Design
  • Orthogonal processes (no cement)
  • Ontologies
  • Agreed common language
  • Human and machine readable.

35
Conclusions
  • Ontological Hypertext
  • can overcome the problem of prolific linking
  • providing an understanding of what can and should
    be linked in order to achieve a particular goal.
  • Free Linking

36
Acknowledgement
  • Les Carr
  • Simon Kempa
  • Timothy Miles-Board
  • Arouna Woukeu
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